Trump’s White House website is full of

The Trump administration’s disdain for factual information has become abundantly clear from the falsities uttered by Trump’s aides in recent days, such as press secretary Sean Spicer’s inaccurate affirmations about the inaugural mob sizings, as well as senior advisor Kellyanne Conway’s use of the Orwellian word “alternative facts” to describe Spicer’s figures.

The world of dubious affirmations extends deeper, though, to Trump’s version of whitehouse.gov, where some of the information presented just days into the new administration is … questionable, if not outright wrong.

Let’s take a look at some of the affirmations presented in the White House site’s “issues” section.

‘Standing up for our law enforcement community’

Chicago’s new police superintendent Eddie Johnson, left, shakes hands with other officers after being sworn in by Mayor Rahm Emanuel at a city council meeting on April 13, 2016, in Chicago.

Image: AP Photo/ M. Spencer Green

Trump has been fond of went on to say that 2015 considered a 17 percent rise in murders in the nation’s 50 “largest cities, ” and that bit of information has now made its way to the White House’s website.

It’s true in the narrowest sense, but misinforming without context. First, homicides went style up in some cities while they stayed even or declined in others over that year. For example, in New York City, reported homicides in New York City fell to 335 assassinations in 2016, down from 352 in 2015, and style down from a whopping 2,262 in 1990.

Secondly and this is where Trump’s statement starts to sound disingenuous murders in the U.S. as a whole have declined by around half since 1993, and criminologists say that single-year changes can obscure this long-term trend.

‘America first energy plan’

In this Feb. 11, 2014 photo, steam rises from the stacks of Basin Electric’s Laramie River Station coal-fired power plant near Wheatland, Wyoming.

Image: AP Photo/ The Casper Star-Tribune, Alan Rogers

When it comes to climate change and energy policies, the new administration is focused on rolling back the Obama administration’s programs to cut greenhouse gas emissions and opening up more oil and gas resources to drilling.

To justify this approach, the website asserts that eliminating Obama’s Climate Action Plan, which includes regulations on emissions from power plants, as well as clean water regulations will increase American wages “by more than $30 billion over the next seven years.”

Sounds great, right?

Trouble is, it’s a made-up claim. The nonprofit research and journalism group Climate Central debunked this on Friday.

Turns out that the matter is $30 billion figure comes from a non-peer reviewed paper written by a finance professor at Louisiana State University in 2015, and it was written for a fossil fuel industry organization. The newspaper didn’t analyze the specific power plant regulations the Trump administration wants to repeal, which constructs the administration’s claim dubious from the start.

Instead, the paper’s writer wrote about the potential economic impacts that the U.S. might expect if it began drilling for more fossil fuels from public lands. Its conclusions are barely robust enough to base national policy decisions on, given that they don’t factor in the costs that will come from climate injuries. The paper reportedly doesn’t correctly analyze the combined effects of removing regulations, either, which also includes costs.

The White House site also makes no mention of how academics and the previous administration have said that the environmental regulations Trump seeks to dismantle would themselves boost part of the economy.

For example, in justifying its regulations in the first place, the Environmental Protection Agency( EPA) calculated that the overall economic benefits of power plant carbon emissions reductions would be in the tens of billions of dollars a year.

‘America first energy plan, ‘ part 2

This April 2, 2010 photo shows a Tesoro Corp. refinery, including a gas flare flame that is part of normal plant operations, in Anacortes, Washington.

Image: AP Photo/ Ted S. Warren

The administration also claims that the U.S. is sitting on $50 trillion( that’s trillion with a ‘t’) “in untapped shale, oil, and natural gas reserves.”

It’s true that there are huge amounts of coal, gas and petroleum that the U.S. has not used to its economic benefit, but that’s because it can’t. The costs to get to much of these resources are prohibitive, attaining the number which, to begin with, comes from a Trump advisor rather than any authoritative analyse a dream figure more than anything, according to Climate Central .

‘Making our military strong again’

A photo shows the USS Missouri in Oahu, Hawaii on Dec. 24, 2016.

Image: The Yomiuri Shimbun via AP Images

This White House page also laments the size of the U.S. Navy, lamenting that the military’s ocean branch has shrunk from more than 500 ships in 1991 to 275 in 2016.

This, like the crime statistics from earlier, is accurate in a specific sense and misleading when given context.

Specifically, the emphasis on ship numbers dismisses technological progress when it is necessary to weaponry. That type of drop-off constructs it seem as though the Navy is weak, but experts say the U.S. Navy is far and away the strongest in the world. As ships have grown more technologically capable, we’ve needed fewer of them to cover the same area. And, if size actually does matter, the U.S. still has more aircraft carrier than all other nations combined( as of late 2015 ).